Efficiency in Health
Efficiency in Health
Research paper released 23 April 2015
A Productivity Commission research paper — based on views offered at a roundtable held with health policy experts in November 2014 — has found that there are significant opportunities to improve the efficiency of Australia’s health care system through reforms that can be delivered without changing existing institutional and funding structures, and without delay.
Benefits to patients are clear; and cost savings are equally self-evident.
In the paper, the Commission
observes that shared and overlapping responsibilities for
health care funding and service delivery often mean that
many participants in the health system share responsibility,
with the consequence that no one participant has the
incentive to pursue reforms. Therefore, in outlining
prospective areas for efficiency gains, and acknowledging
the rough justice of it, the Commission has proposed a
responsible party and provided a roadmap, including
timelines.
Participants in the Commission’s health
policy roundtable
Alan Castleman Australian Centre for
Health Research
Debora Picone Australian Commission on
Safety and Quality in Health Care
Alison
Verhoeven Australian Healthcare and Hospitals
Association
David Kalisch Australian Institute of Health
and Welfare
Rohan Mead Australian Unity
Jeffrey
Richardson Centre for Health Economics, Monash
University
Clifford Hughes Clinical Excellence
Commission
Carol Gisz Competition Policy Review
Secretariat
Martin Bowles Department of Health
(Australian Government)
David Cullen Department of Health
(Australian Government)
Frances Diver Department of
Health (Victoria)
Pradeep Philip Department of Health
(Victoria)
Jim Birch Ernst and Young
Stephen
Duckett Grattan Institute
Sharon Willcox Health Policy
Solutions
Tony Sherbon Independent Hospital Pricing
Authority
Shane Solomon Independent Hospital Pricing
Authority
Andrew Wilson Medibank Private
Robyn
Ward Medical Services Advisory Committee
Anthony
Scott Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social
Research
Adam Elshaug Menzies Centre for Health Policy,
School of Public Health, University of Sydney
Barbara
Yeoh Monash Health
Ian Scott Princess Alexandra
Hospital
Ian Frazer Translational Research
Institute
Opportunities for efficiency gains in the
Australian health care system
Opportunities, reform
actions and
responsibilities Timeframes Outcomes
Health
technology assessment
Australian
Government Minister for Health to:
• accelerate work to review existing MBS and PBS items — giving priority to high cost items that have not been subject to economic evaluation, or for which the benefits are relatively uncertain — reduce or remove subsidies where appropriate, and report on progress annually
• review and revise Australia’s system for health technology assessment (HTA), with a focus on reducing unnecessary duplication and fragmentation, improving disinvestment mechanisms (giving consideration to the merits of an independent decision maker), and deterring clinicians from using MBS and PBS items in circumstances where they are not clinically and cost effective
• share Australian Government HTA assessments with the states and territories
• Immediate
• Within 1 year
• Immediate
• Treatments that are not clinically or cost effective — or that are harmful to patients — are not subsidised
• Patients potentially have greater access to higher value health interventions
• HTA processes
achieve objectives at least cost
Evidence
based guidance for clinicians
Australian Government Minister for
Health to establish expert panels of clinicians to
assess and endorse clinical guidelines, and to advise on
dissemination, implementation and review • Within 1
year • Better informed health professionals, fewer
adverse events and less waste
Provider payment
models
• Independent
Hospital Pricing Authority to introduce a quality
and safety dimension to pricing within activity based
funding, subject to current work confirming the feasibility
of doing so
• Australian, state and territory health ministers to trial and evaluate new payment models
• A comprehensive review of the Australian health care system — instigated by the Australian Government Minister for Health — would provide an opportunity to investigate ways to better align financial incentives with health policy objectives • Within 2 years
• Ongoing
• Review can commence immediately • Safer and higher quality hospital services
• More coordinated patient care, especially
in primary care
Preventive
health
• Australian, state
and territory governments to routinely trial and
evaluate prevention initiatives
• Options to strengthen incentives for cost effective investment in preventive health to be considered as part of a comprehensive review of the health care system • Ongoing
• Review can commence immediately • Cost effective investment in preventive health
Opportunities, reform actions and
responsibilities Timeframes Outcomes
Health
workforce
• State and
territory health ministers to initiate role
expansions, based on evaluations of past and current trials,
and amend scopes of practice accordingly
• Australian Government Minister for Health to identify where there would be benefits in expanding the types of health professionals that can access reimbursement for MBS or PBS items
• Australian Government Minister for Health to promote and champion workforce reforms at the national level, following abolition of Health Workforce Australia • Ongoing
• Ongoing
• Ongoing • Greater workforce flexibility, potentially lower labour costs, better patient access and higher workforce satisfaction
• Nationally coordinated
workforce policy
activities
Pharmacy
•
Australian Government to remove
restrictions on retail pharmacy location
• State governments to remove restrictions on retail pharmacy ownership • Within 1 year
• Within 1 year • Greater competition in retail pharmacy
•
Safety and access regulated cost
effectively
Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme
pricing
Australian Government
Minister for Health to:
• eliminate delays in price disclosure processes
• identify ways to apply a larger statutory price reduction to PBS items upon listing of a generic alternative
• examine the case for a
statutorily independent PBS price setting authority •
Within 1 year • More competitive PBS
prices
Private health insurance
Australian Government Minister for
Health to:
• facilitate trials of expansions in the role of private health insurers — informed by proposals from insurers — and evaluate these trials
• commission a review of the objectives and performance of private health insurance regulations, ideally as part of a comprehensive and independent review of the Australian health care system
• Within 1 year
• Review can commence immediately • Greater involvement of private health insurers in preventive health and coordinated care
• Competitive and innovative health insurance
market that serves the needs of
consumers
Information and
transparency
• Australian,
state and territory health ministers to release
more data on the performance of individual health care
facilities and clinicians, and drive greater uptake of
electronic health records
• Australian Government Minister for Health to publicly respond to the Review of the Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record
• Australian Government social policy ministers to provide researchers with greater access to MBS, PBS, Centrelink and other government held datasets • Immediate
• Within 6 months
• Immediate • Increased public reporting on individual hospitals and other providers, such as general practices and dentists
• Greater use of electronic health records
• Researchers can access and link administrative datasets
ENDS